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NEF 2004 Annual Report - Near East Foundation

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PAGE 1 | PAGE 2<br />

Thirty-one percent of Lesotho’s productive population<br />

—about 330,000 people between the ages of 15 and<br />

49--is infected with the AIDS virus. That’s the fourth<br />

highest prevalence rate in the world and the poorest<br />

of the most affected countries. As the disease takes<br />

its toll, an estimated 100,000-plus of Lesotho’s<br />

children are orphaned, abandoned and at risk of<br />

early death, malnutrition, disease, exploitation,<br />

sexual abuse, other traumas and dire situations.<br />

The New <strong>East</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> is both addressing this<br />

issue in the Mokhotlong District where we work—the<br />

most remote and poorest area of the country; and<br />

putting names and faces on these anonymous<br />

numbers. Kids like four-month-old Hlompho and<br />

Tumeliso, whose mothers were too sick and too sad<br />

to care for them. And Hlompho’s brother, Thabang,<br />

four or five, his true age unknown… And Rorisang who is being nurtured along with her very<br />

young mother, still a student, because the grandmother is very sick and the family has no<br />

money.<br />

And Tiisetso, about one-and-a-half, who lived by himself most<br />

of the time in a cold house, sometimes outside…even in the<br />

rain. He arrived at <strong>NEF</strong>’s country director’s house hungry and<br />

skinny and in two months has gained seven pounds and now<br />

can stand by pulling on a chair. He also can breathe, his<br />

pneumonia now gone. Hlompho too has gained weight and<br />

his skin rashes are starting to clear.<br />

Beyond providing individual children with emotional and<br />

physical warmth, safety, rehabilitation from malnutrition and<br />

sickness or care with terminal illness, reconnection with family<br />

or caring adoptive homes, schooling and mentoring; the <strong>Near</strong><br />

<strong>East</strong> <strong>Foundation</strong> is combating the AIDS calamity with an<br />

integrated and comprehensive approach that combines<br />

health, agriculture, infrastructure development and more:<br />

• home visits, village gatherings, volunteer training and selfhelp<br />

groups for AIDS-affected children, their caregivers and others--teaching very practical

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